Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Johnny, Not meant to be a pipe dream, but a practice to emulate. I should have made it clearer that H.C-B 'took the picture in an instant' by raising it to his eyes and framing it, but the prefocus was something he did most of the time, he had his assistant mark the lenses with her nail polish to his preferred distances, (cf. 'Magnum', Russel Miller, Secker and Warburg) and as you'll notice many of his famous street photos feature less than perfectly sharp forground subjects. Your psuedonym reminds me of a lovely paperback, 'Shots from the Hip' by Johnny Stilletto, (AKA Philip Thomas), published by Bloomsbury, ISBN 0 7475 1186 1 Sadly he's not a Leica user though his pictures all look as if they should have been taken with one! Jem - -----Original Message----- From: Johnny Deadman [SMTP:deadman@jukebox.demon.co.uk] > Beaumant Newhall describes (in his autobiography, 'Focus') a lovely cafe > scene where he was with H.C-B... This is not such a pipe dream, actually. If I was shooting with an M I would automatically set it for the ballpark exposure when I went into a new lighting situation eg the cafe. It would then be easy to focus according to scale ("without looking at the camera" is IMHO perhaps a slight exagerration). I have some very nice pictures taken in exactly this way. Important to be using a 35mm or wider lens, as the framing is pretty hit and miss. - -- Johnny Deadman